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ADJECTIVE (pertaining to a body)physical, material, actual, substantial, tangible, corporal, carnal, corporealADVERB (affecting the body)physically, manually, or forcefully
amain
The window was stuck so the janitor had to forcefully open it using all his might.
Yes, the word forcefully is an adverb.Most adverbs, but not all of them, end in the suffix -ly.An example sentence is: "he forcefully kicked the door open".
invade
forcefully because it runs with power
No, the word 'calories' is a noun, the plural form of the noun calorie, a word for a unit of heat used to indicate the amount of energy that foods will produce in the human body; a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the noun 'calories' is 'they' as the subject of a sentence or clause, and 'them' as the object of a verb or a preposition.Example: There are only two hundred calories in this. I can burn them off on the treadmill.
The definition of the word hitting is: "To come into contact with someone forcefully." A sentence where one can use the word hitting is: "The car hit the guardrail."
des calories (fem.)
In a word; No.
Yes, the word 'calories' is a noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'calorie'; a word for a unit of energy, a word for a thing.
In a word yes. There is a compound within chocolate which is a poison to ALL mammals including humans. The difference is humans are better at ridding the body of this compound and weigh an awful lot more so the affects need allot more chocolate. This is one reason why you feel sick after too much. I'm not sure how good or bad squirrels are at ridding the body of the compound but with regards to there very small mass I would think they don't need an awful lot to kill them.